That’s not, how should I put it, consistent with the facts. Take a look a the chart below that shows how many “Basic Savings Bank Deposit Accounts” (BSBDA) were opened over the past six years. In the two years before Modi, the annual increase in the number of BSBDAs was 44 and 61 million, which jumped to 147 million in 2014-15 (for simplicity let’s give Modi credit for all accounts opened that year, including the month-and-a-half prior to his taking office in mid-May).

Now 147 million is an impressive number, even in comparison with the previous year’s 61 million. But to understand what Modi is bringing to the table in terms of vision and acumen, you need to estimate how much better he is doing than his predecessor would have. A linear extrapolation from the previous trend gives you around 90 million new accounts in 2014-15 under a third United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government. But let’s be strict and assume that the UPA would have added the same number of accounts as it did the previous year. Under that assumption, the Modi effect is a net addition of 86 million accounts.

That’s still a solid number, leaving aside criticisms that more than half of all Jan Dhan Yojana (JDY) accounts are dormant, and that there has so far been minimal utilisation of the admittedly useful features (overdraft facility, life insurance, accident insurance) that JDY brings to the table. But raising the tally by a fifth does not even come close to single-handedly bringing financial inclusion to India’s poor.

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Didn’t get your point properly. You yourself attribute the increase in number of accounts to the PM but the headline says otherwise. Of course the life insurance and accident insurance features would remain dormant / statistically low to show some difference for a certain period of time. Please explain.